<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="static/style.xsl"?><OAI-PMH xmlns="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/OAI-PMH.xsd"><responseDate>2026-04-14T17:09:28Z</responseDate><request verb="GetRecord" identifier="oai:uvadoc.uva.es:10324/6892" metadataPrefix="dim">https://uvadoc.uva.es/oai/request</request><GetRecord><record><header><identifier>oai:uvadoc.uva.es:10324/6892</identifier><datestamp>2025-03-03T10:15:48Z</datestamp><setSpec>com_10324_1134</setSpec><setSpec>com_10324_931</setSpec><setSpec>com_10324_894</setSpec><setSpec>col_10324_1213</setSpec></header><metadata><dim:dim xmlns:dim="http://www.dspace.org/xmlns/dspace/dim" xmlns:doc="http://www.lyncode.com/xoai" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.dspace.org/xmlns/dspace/dim http://www.dspace.org/schema/dim.xsd">
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="478805e0-cc97-404e-a054-c864803dac87" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Davidsen, Peter K.</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="5d944bbc-3607-4b4a-9b30-9462d90bcab4" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Herbert, Jhon M.</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="9305faea-b128-42a8-9301-c704d283dd62" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Antczak, Kim</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="c157c7a0-ae87-4136-8c9a-adb6531acaca" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Ferrer, Elisabet</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="ce920bea-6fbd-4614-8929-6ce26bb93938" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Peinado, Víctor I.</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="9b1be84c-e5fc-4e5d-9d9c-6d0a0b02e4ec" confidence="600">González Martínez, Constancio</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="56140115-6579-4fdd-9ce6-735aad5d9abe" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Roca, Josep</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="ca2f8b1b-f12d-4139-b7a6-8564fa07a5aa" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Egginton, Stuart</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="14b5edde-acf0-4204-89bf-140d128f9b50" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Barberá, Joan A.</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="contributor" qualifier="author" authority="7bc5b0fe-1b31-44f0-b943-0552682c9c17" confidence="500" orcid_id="">Falciani, Francesco</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="date" qualifier="accessioned">2014-11-04T12:40:34Z</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="date" qualifier="available">2014-11-04T12:40:34Z</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="date" qualifier="issued">2014</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="citation" lang="es">Genome Medicine 2014, 6:59</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="issn" lang="es">1756-994X</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="uri">http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/6892</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="doi" lang="es">10.1186/s13073-014-0059-5</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="publicationtitle" lang="es">Genome Medicine</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="identifier" qualifier="publicationvolume" lang="es">59</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="description" lang="es">Producción Científica</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="description" qualifier="abstract" lang="es">Background: A relatively large percentage of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) develop&#xd;
systemic co-morbidities that affect prognosis, among which muscle wasting is particularly debilitating. Despite&#xd;
significant research effort, the pathophysiology of this important extrapulmonary manifestation is still unclear. A key&#xd;
question that remains unanswered is to what extent systemic inflammatory mediators might play a role in this&#xd;
pathology.&#xd;
Cigarette smoke (CS) is the main risk factor for developing COPD and therefore animal models chronically exposed&#xd;
to CS have been proposed for mechanistic studies and biomarker discovery. Although mice have been successfully&#xd;
used as a pre-clinical in vivo model to study the pulmonary effects of acute and chronic CS exposure, data suggest&#xd;
that they may be inadequate models for studying the effects of CS on peripheral muscle function. In contrast,&#xd;
recent findings indicate that the guinea pig model (Cavia porcellus) may better mimic muscle wasting.&#xd;
Methods: We have used a systems biology approach to compare the transcriptional profile of hindlimb skeletal&#xd;
muscles from a Guinea pig rodent model exposed to CS and/or chronic hypoxia to COPD patients with muscle&#xd;
wasting.&#xd;
Results: We show that guinea pigs exposed to long-term CS accurately reflect most of the transcriptional changes&#xd;
observed in dysfunctional limb muscle of severe COPD patients when compared to matched controls. Using network&#xd;
inference, we could then show that the expression profile in whole lung of genes encoding for soluble inflammatory&#xd;
mediators is informative of the molecular state of skeletal muscles in the guinea pig smoking model. Finally, we show&#xd;
that CXCL10 and CXCL9, two of the candidate systemic cytokines identified using this pre-clinical model, are indeed&#xd;
detected at significantly higher levels in serum of COPD patients, and that their serum protein level is inversely&#xd;
correlated with the expression of aerobic energy metabolism genes in skeletal muscle.&#xd;
Conclusions: We conclude that CXCL10 and CXCL9 are promising candidate inflammatory signals linked to the&#xd;
regulation of central metabolism genes in skeletal muscles. On a methodological level, our work also shows that a&#xd;
system level analysis of animal models of diseases can be very effective to generate clinically relevant hypothesis.</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="format" qualifier="mimetype" lang="es">application/pdf</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="language" qualifier="iso" lang="es">eng</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="publisher" lang="es">BioMed Central</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="rights" qualifier="accessRights" lang="es">info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="rights" qualifier="uri">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="rights">Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="subject" lang="es">EPOC</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="title" lang="es">A systems biology approach reveals a link between systemic cytokines and skeletal muscle energy metabolism in a rodent smoking model and human COPD</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="type" lang="es">info:eu-repo/semantics/article</dim:field>
<dim:field mdschema="dc" element="peerreviewed" lang="es">SI</dim:field>
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